The story of my discovery and acquisition of Tacoma Fire's former Engine 17, one of the eight 1970 American LaFrance Type 900 pumpers once owned by the TFD and revered during my childhood, and its hoped-for road towards restoration.
Friday, June 14, 2013
Thursday, June 13, 2013
Q2B Installed
First off, let me just gripe a bit about the rats nest under the dash. Surely some of this is leftover from the removal of radios at some point, but... really? I looked it over when I brought 17 home and was annoyed at the time, but it had been a while and I forgot how annoying it was. Look at this mess!
So there was a random, small, single-conductor wire sticking out where the Q used to go. Much too small to be a supply for a Q, so I thought maybe it was for the siren brake. Verified that there was power to the siren brake button, but wherever it went after the siren brake (disappeared into an anonymous wire bundle), it did not come out at the pedestal. Starting at zero, then.
Also, there was still a wire to the Q's foot pedal, which also still had power. And once again, the sending end disappeared into an anonymous bundle never to be found again.
Clipped back both the random wire at the pedestal, and the siren pedal wires, and securely capped off the hot ends until such time in the future the more complete rewiring can be done and those removed. Unlike the old stewards of E17, who just disconnected random crap and left it to lay there, dead ends and random-access grounding lugs and such. GAH!
Ran a new 4-gauge wire right from the battery selector switch to a new 150A circuit breaker, then under the cab to a new starter solenoid. Stole a hot lead from the solenoid's source and ran a 12-guage to the foot pedal then back to the solenoid actuator terminal.
By the way, I found that my cheap hand tool cutters were no match for 4-gauge wire! Glad that piece didn't put my eye out when it came off!
4-gauge wire - 1 ---- cheap wire cutters - 0 |
Then there was the siren brake needing attention. Ran a new 12-gauge line from there to the pedestal before finding that I had a bad section of wire. Tested for continuity, and it failed. Wow, was that frustrating, how often do you get manufacturing defects in wire? What a chore! Removed the bad section and restrung it. I am not a fan of butt-end connectors and prefer all-new wires and terminals, and the siren brake was no exception. While attempting to remove the terminals from the old siren brake, the 43-year-old circuit board lost a chunk. Thankfully you can still get this exact starter-type switch at NAPA for about $8. Short delay, but onward.
Original siren brake switch, may it rest in "pieces" |
So here it is this morning.
Got a sweet video of the beast winding all the way up and waking up the chickens for miles around (sort of obscure C.W. McCall reference there). Just as soon as we figure out how to get that video off of my son's iPod, we'll post it here.
Engine 17 has a SIREN, baby!
Friday, June 7, 2013
Q2B - with video
This Q was originally a flush mount, but I also got a pedestal and cowl for it. Trouble was, for some reason the flywheel housing had been rotated 180 degrees, making it impossible for the pedestal and siren brake to co-exist. Taking it apart to fix that, I got stuck needing an impact wrench to release the bolt holding the flywheel (the four screws to release and rotate the housing are behind the flywheel), and I don't have an impact wrench.
Took it to the shop guys at work and struck a deal. If they'd give me ten minutes and access to an impact wrench, they could play with the siren. They just ended up brushing me aside and doing the work anyway, because guys in coveralls are unable to stand and watch a guy in slacks and a tie do anything at the workbench.
Situation resolved, the Federal Q2B is now ready for installation on E17. Enjoy the show.
Thursday, May 30, 2013
Living in a Fire Station is apparently of national interest
Yeah I got there first, but I do not deserve full credit, as I could not have stopped the fire completely without all of the help that showed up after I did. I don't have permission to name names, but let's give it up for the other crews that came out and did the bulk of the work.
The local paper decided, instead of an article on the fire, to do a feature on our newly-discovered status as a live-in family at a fire station:
Volunteer firefighter operates out of rural home in Bear Prairie
I guess no one minds a pat on the back once in a while. But really, I do love this job, no credit or rewards are required, and I honestly would have been happier to continue to fly under the radar. Anyway, due to how these things work (when one gets spotted in the media and owes the crew ice cream), this kind of coverage necessitated delivering ice cream enough to cover all shifts at six nearby fire stations across four fire districts. Cha-ching!
But it gets better. Or worse, depending on how you see these things. Firehouse Magazine decided to pick it up:
Rural Wash. Station aka Home Has No Siren, No Pole
And now I hear that the Daily Dispatch also has it linked from their front page.
(Update, now Fire Engineering has picked up the story as well: Volunteer Firefighter Operates Out of Rural WA Home)
I am getting Facebook requests for ice cream from friends all over the country. Wisely, some of them are noting that ice cream doesn't ship well, and are suggesting certain beers instead.
One of my co-workers turned one of the media photos into this hilarious meme:
Through all this, somehow Engine 17 has escaped mention. If someone can think of a magic way to turn this media attention into a fundraiser to help fund the restoration 17, that would be terrific.
As one good friend reminded me in the midst of this craziness and my fretting about overexposure, I guess this is my 15 minutes of fame and I should just ride it out and enjoy it.
OK, I'll try.
.... gaaaaaah!!!!
Friday, May 3, 2013
The return of Engine 17
Seeing a fire engine on blocks is a sad, sad sight. I feel so much guilt every time I look at her!
Then, sometime over the winter, one of my rather young children apparently turned the battery on to play with the pretty lights, and didn't turn it off. By the time I discovered this, the batteries had to have been drained completely dead for weeks. Not sure the batteries will be recoverable or not, that is a little outside of my area of expertise.
However, a friendly benefactor has come forward to assist me with purchasing replacement tires and possibly batteries if needed, and I have a good "in" with a local firefighter who works on large trucks who is willing to bring a service rig up to the house to replace 17's tires on the spot.
Hopefully she'll be back on the road soon so that the tales may continue.
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A couple of years ago I registered at alfowners.com so I could get help from the members there. At some point I requested a change to my username, which was granted, but my login never worked again. The password recovery script just locked up with a database error for the longest time. Now it appears to go through, but email ever arrives. No email address was provided for the admin. New registrations were disabled. I have been locked out of alfowners.com for well over a year. I've dropped some notes on Facebook to try to find out who runs the place to get that fixed. If any of you, my faithful and patient readers, happen to know who that is, please let me know.